Difference between revisions of "Team:UNIK Copenhagen/home"
Line 321: | Line 321: | ||
<h5>Green Lab</h5> | <h5>Green Lab</h5> | ||
− | In the 'Green Lab', the team will attempt to make the moss more hardy by modifying it with an 'anti-freeze' gene from a ringworm. This amazing feature works by attaching onto the ends of the ice crystals forming in the cell, slowing down the growth of the crystals. Then, we will attempt to produce resveratrol in the moss, demonstrating the potential of using the hardy moss to produce | + | In the 'Green Lab', the team will attempt to make the moss more hardy by modifying it with an 'anti-freeze' gene from a ringworm. This amazing feature works by attaching onto the ends of the ice crystals forming in the cell, slowing down the growth of the crystals. Then, we will attempt to produce resveratrol in the moss, demonstrating the potential of using the hardy moss to produce compounds, such as pharmaceuticals which have shelf lives shorter than the trip between the planets. <a href="https://2015.igem.org/team:UNIK_Copenhagen/Green_Lab">More about Green Lab</a> |
<br> | <br> | ||
<br> | <br> |
Revision as of 12:27, 24 June 2015
Project SpaceMoss
At SpaceMoss, we are working on a new breed of moss, designed to be able to live on Mars. Moss can be engineered to produce an almost limitless variety of compounds, and the implications are enormous. These very days, we are looking into what, exactly, our moss should produce, and it could be litterally anything. Should it be pharmaceuticals for the first colonists? Plastics for use in 3D printers on the first Mars outpost? Or even terraforming of the atmosphere? Follow our ideas, work, research and production through the next few months. I think we're in for one hell of a ride!